BFF-04 Russia’s hackers long tied to military, secret services

272

ZCZC

BFF-04

RUSSIA-HACKING-COMPUTERS-POLITICS

Russia’s hackers long tied to military, secret services

MOSCOW, Oct 6, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – During the Soviet era, the country’s top
computer scientists and programmers largely worked for the secret services.

That practice appears to have resumed under President Vladimir Putin, as
Russia faces accusations of waging a global campaign of cyber attacks.

Dutch officials on Thursday accused four Russians from the GRU military
intelligence agency of attempting to hack into the global chemical weapons
watchdog in The Hague.

The agency has investigated both the fatal poisoning of Russian former
double-agent Sergei Skripal; and an alleged chemical attack by Moscow-allied
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

The Baltic states were the first to accuse Moscow of mounting attacks to
knock out their sites back in 2007.

Estonia said one such attack had put the country’s main emergency service
phone number out of action for over an hour.

Since then, accusations of cyber attacks have continued against Moscow.

The Russian hacker group variously known as Fancy Bear, APT 28 and Sofacy
has been linked to GRU and accused of attacks on the US Democrats’ 2016
presidential campaign, together with Russia’s FSB security service, the
successor to the KGB.

The skills of Russian hackers today developed from a tradition of excellent
computing and programming skills dating back to the Soviet era.

“The whole structure of the economy was skewed towards the military
sector,” said Oleg Demidov, a consultant at the Moscow-based independent
think-tank PIR Center.

“All the achievements of Soviet science including the first computers went
to serve the military sector.”

The most brilliant students were pushed to work in the military and space
sector, he added.

– Banking crime –

After the Soviet Union fell apart in 1991, its armed forces were broken up
and most of the top specialists turned to the nascent banking sector in
Russia, either to work there or to attack it.

In this era saw the first cyber attacks on banking operations and the first
mentions of Russian hackers.

“Now Russian hackers are excellently trained and equipped and they still
occupy one of the top positions in banking crime,” said Demidov — even if
the Russian justice system has begun to crack down on them.

In 2016, Russian cybersecurity giant Kaspersky estimated that between 2012
and 2015, Russian hackers had stolen at least $790 million worldwide.

Russian computer scientists study at “very strong universities in Saint
Petersburg, Moscow, Novosibirsk, Kazan or Krasnoyarsk”, said Denis Kuskov of
TelecomDaily specialised research agency.

They “can work anywhere in the world, in any international company,” he
added.

In recent years, however, more have opted to stay in Russia, he said. “The
secret services have grown more interested in good programmers and it’s
easier for them to find work in Russia now.”

In 2012, the Russian defence ministry announced it was creating its own
“cyber troops”. It launched a wide recruitment drive that included
promotional videos on social media.

For Demidov, the growing wave of attacks attributed to Russian hackers has
come about as Russia becomes better able to defend its own cyber security
more strongly, the military sphere included.

“These efforts… have began to bring results,” he said.

Today however, even the most established players in Russian IT are in the
sights of the West.

The US in 2017 imposed a ban on the use of Kaspersky’s anti-virus software
by federal agencies amid concerns about the company’s links to the Russian
intelligence services.

While many young Russians may choose to work for the military and secret
services for reasons of patriotism, some may still be more interested by the
money.

This week a military tribunal in Moscow held a closed-doors trial for the
head of operational control at the FSB’s centre for information security,
Colonel Sergei Mikhalkov and three alleged accomplices.

Kommersant daily reported that they were accused of passing secrets on the
Russian secret services’ cyber technology to the FBI in return for $10
million.

BSS/AFP/GMR/0851 hrs